DeChants Jonah P, Price Myeshia N, Nath Ronita, Hobaica Steven, Green Amy E
The Trevor Project, West Hollywood, CA, USA.
Department of Counseling and Educational Psychology, Indiana University, IN, USA.
Int J Transgend Health. 2024 Apr 8;26(2):351-359. doi: 10.1080/26895269.2024.2335512. eCollection 2025.
Transgender and nonbinary young people report disparities in both physical and mental health due to negative experiences associated with their identity. Despite bathrooms being an everyday necessity, transgender and nonbinary young people may avoid using them due to previous negative experiences or anxieties surrounding them, which may be related to poor health. This study examines the association of avoiding public bathrooms and mental health indicators among transgender and nonbinary young people.
Data were collected in 2021 via a cross-sectional survey of 33,993 lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, and questioning young people ages 13-24, including 12,596 transgender or nonbinary young people. Bivariate analyses were used to examine the prevalence of avoiding public bathrooms and the health issues associated with that avoidance. Adjusted logistic regression models examined whether sometimes or always avoiding public bathrooms was associated with higher rates of anxiety symptoms, depression symptoms, and suicide risk.
In the past year, 49% of transgender and nonbinary young people reported sometimes avoiding public bathrooms due to concerns around using them and 22% always avoided them. Respondents reported a number of negative physical effects from avoiding public bathrooms: 67% reported "holding it" when they needed to use the bathroom and 38% abstained from drinking or eating to avoid using these facilities. Transgender and nonbinary young people who reported sometimes or always avoiding public bathrooms reported significantly higher odds of all assessed mental health indicators. Notably, those who reported always or sometimes avoiding public bathrooms had almost twice the odds of attempting suicide in the past year (aOR = 1.95, 95% CI = 1.77-2.16, < .001) compared to their transgender and nonbinary peers who never reported avoiding public bathrooms.
These findings highlight the need for policies protecting transgender and nonbinary young people's safety and access to public bathrooms, which align with their gender identity.
Transgender and nonbinary young people report poorer mental health and higher suicide risk than their cisgender peers. Avoiding public bathrooms when one needs to use them can result in negative physical health problems and, in our sample, is associated with worse mental health and higher suicide risk. These findings demonstrate that implementing inclusive bathroom policies may improve physical and mental health and decrease suicide risk among transgender and nonbinary young people.
跨性别和非二元性别的年轻人报告称,由于与其身份相关的负面经历,他们在身心健康方面存在差异。尽管卫生间是日常必需品,但跨性别和非二元性别的年轻人可能会因之前的负面经历或对卫生间的焦虑而避免使用,这可能与健康状况不佳有关。本研究探讨了跨性别和非二元性别的年轻人中避免使用公共卫生间与心理健康指标之间的关联。
2021年通过对33993名年龄在13 - 24岁的女同性恋、男同性恋、双性恋、跨性别、酷儿和性取向存疑的年轻人进行横断面调查收集数据,其中包括12596名跨性别或非二元性别的年轻人。采用双变量分析来研究避免使用公共卫生间的患病率以及与这种避免相关的健康问题。调整后的逻辑回归模型检验了有时或总是避免使用公共卫生间是否与焦虑症状、抑郁症状和自杀风险的较高发生率相关。
在过去一年中,49%的跨性别和非二元性别的年轻人报告有时因担心使用公共卫生间而避免使用,22%的人总是避免使用。受访者报告了因避免使用公共卫生间而产生的一些负面身体影响:67%的人表示需要上厕所时会“憋着”,38%的人会不喝水或不吃饭以避免使用这些设施。报告有时或总是避免使用公共卫生间的跨性别和非二元性别的年轻人在所有评估的心理健康指标上的几率显著更高。值得注意的是,与从未报告避免使用公共卫生间的跨性别和非二元性别的同龄人相比,那些报告总是或有时避免使用公共卫生间的人在过去一年中尝试自杀的几率几乎高出一倍(调整后的比值比 = 1.95,95%置信区间 = 1.77 - 2.16,P <.001)。
这些发现凸显了制定保护跨性别和非二元性别的年轻人安全并确保其能够按照自身性别认同使用公共卫生间的政策的必要性。
跨性别和非二元性别的年轻人报告的心理健康状况比他们的顺性别同龄人更差,自杀风险更高。需要使用卫生间时避免使用会导致负面的身体健康问题,在我们的样本中,还与更差的心理健康状况和更高的自杀风险相关。这些发现表明,实施包容性的卫生间政策可能会改善跨性别和非二元性别的年轻人的身心健康,并降低自杀风险。